It's been a tiring month of January for the Homestead South Dade wide receiver, but after two official college visits and much deliberation, the former Florida State pledge has narrowed his final list of schools. He has eliminated FSU, Miami and Vanderbilt.

Worton will make his decision public Wednesday at a school ceremony that will also include teammates WR Tyre Brady (Miami) and WR Nathaniel Terry (FAU) signing national letters of intent.

“It's going to be extremely difficult,” said Worton, who plans to let Gators and Mountaineers coaches know Monday what he has decided, but he will keep his decision private until Wednesday. “So I'll let the coaches know then and I'm not going to let the media know or anything like that. I just want to stay out of the limelight. There's been too much of that already with the press.”

Worton was supposed to visit FSU officially this weekend, but he publicly de-committed from his Seminoles pledge on Twitter this past Tuesday night, and he said, “I didn't really see any reason since I wasn't going to go there.”

He had also motioned possibly visiting Vanderbilt, which he did not, and there were reports that he was officially visiting Miami, but Worton said those were erroneous.

The 6-foot-1, 175-pound Worton has zeroed in on two schools with coaches he said he has developed strong relationships in Florida's Travaris Robinson, Joker Phillips and Kurt Roper; and West Virginia's Lonine Galloway and JuJuan Seider.

As for West Virginia, Worton likes the fact that the Mountaineers, “Like to get their receivers involved and they throw it a lot. Coach [head coach Dana] Holgorsen likes to throw the ball around.”

And at Florida, the Gators are looking to break open the passing game, and Worton said he likes the idea of being involved in the evolution of that process. “Yes, that's intriguing, as well. It's a great situation there and it's great they want me to come be a part of it.”

It's become a process that could have gotten extremely frustrating for Worton as schools looked to get him on campus for visits, the media hounded him for his thoughts and fans clamored for his services.

“I wouldn't say it's been frustrating though, but it has definitely been tiring,” Worton said.

Worton had a very productive senior season, helping lead the Bucs to the Florida Class 8A state crown. He had six catches for 159 yards and three touchdowns in the title game against Apopka, and he finished the season with 42 catches for 1,052 yards and 15 touchdowns.

His decision will be hard enough to make, but then he'll have to difficult task of making the phone call to the coach who loses out in the Worton chase.

“Yeah, I'm not looking forward to that and it will be hard,” Worton said. “These are coaches who I've built great relationships with and who I like a lot and to have to make that call will be very hard.”